Haaretz reports that the administration misled Israel regarding the terms of the proposed interim agreement with Iran over its nuclear weapons program. One senior Israeli official explained that on Wednesday Israel had seen an outline that the Israelis “didn’t love but could live with.” Thursday morning French and British officials, and not the White House, told the Israelis that the terms had changed and were much more favorable than what they’d been shown previously. “Suddenly it changed to something much worse that included a much more significant lifting of sanctions,” said the Israeli official. “The feeling was that the Americans are much more eager to reach an agreement than the Iranians.”

On substance, the Israelis, like the French, appear very concerned about the provisions of the interim deal that: (a) permitted Tehran to continue some uranium enrichment; (b) allowed Iran to continue building the heavy water reactor in Arak (with only an Iranian commitment not to activate it), which would preserve the Iranian short-cut to nuclear capabilities via a plutonium — rather than uranium — track; and, most notably, (c) provided Tehran with incentives that the Israelis see as the beginning of the dismantling of the sanctions regime. Israel’s concern is that the proposed sanctions relief will not, in practice, be reversible, while the Iranian commitments could be easily reversed (and in the case of Arak will not even be halted).

The French objections to the deal led the P5+1 countries to demand more of Iran, so the Iranian team left without a deal to return for consultations.

Mr. Kerry, briefing the Senate Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs Committee, made his case against the committee’s moving forward with a proposal for new sanctions even as Western diplomats were talking about easing existing sanctions in exchange for concessions on Iran’s nuclear program. …

The briefing was part of an all-out effort by the administration both to tamp down congressional saber rattling and to move diplomacy forward to reach the agreement that proved elusive over the weekend in Geneva. President Obama has made a flurry of calls to the leaders of Britain and France ahead of a resumption of nuclear negotiations in Geneva on Nov. 21 and 22. On Tuesday night, he called Senator Harry Reid of Nevada, the majority leader, to discuss Iran, among other issues.

Israeli Strategic Affairs Minister Yuval Steinitz said in Jerusalem on Wednesday that steps under consideration by the U.S. and international powers directly or indirectly would ease the punitive sanctions by about $40 billion a year, or around 40% of the overall annual impact. …

Ms. Psaki dismissed the Israeli estimate, and wouldn’t give a U.S. estimate for the impact of the sanctions relief being considered, but said it would be considerably less than the figure Mr. Steinitz cited. …

“Those who claim our proposal is not a fair deal and makes too many concessions should ask themselves why the Iranians turned it down,” a Treasury Department official said.

I find it interesting that a charge that Secretary Kerry misled Israel doesn’t get disputed, but the State Department goes after Minister Steinitz for his figures, without offering any of their own. Still the Treasury official’s question is an interesting one. Why did Iran turn down the deal?

“It’s the United States which should get their partners on board, not Iran,” said Mohammad Ali Shabani, a political analyst with close ties to Mr. Zarif. “From the information that is available, what was on the table was an American proposal. It was France that ripped into it, not Iran.”

The official quoted by the Wall Street Journal meant to suggest that the sanctions relief was not so significant as to entice Iran to close a deal. But the Iranians tell a different story. The Iranians were bothered by the stricter conditions added by the French. They apparently were happy with the terms offered by Kerry before France got involved. So administration talk about the sanctions relief is misdirection. And if Iran was bothered by the restrictions imposed by France, the level of sanctions doesn’t necessarily matter. Further diplomacy, in this case would mean trying to water down the French demands.

If the argument was simply that the administration wanted to give Iran more time to come around to the P5+1′s way of thinking, it wouldn’t be so bad. But it’s clear that the administration is looking to weaken the West’s demands; not weaken Iran’s resolve. As with Syria, the President seems more interested in making an agreement that would mask his inaction than actually achieving his stated goal. (In this case preventing Iran from developing nuclear weapons; previously it was getting rid of Syria’s chemical weapons.)

-----

If you found this post interesting or informative, please it below. Thanks!